I picked a good time to consolidate my companies and launch a new web venture. Diversify for when the shit hits the fan. 2009 is gonna be interesting for sure.
http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/BreakingNews.html
The big theme for 2009 economically will be contraction. The end of the cheap energy era will announce itself as the end of conventional "growth" and the shrinking back of activity, wealth, and populations. Contraction will come as a great shock to a world of conventionally programmed economists. They will toil and sweat to account for it, and they will probably be wrong. Unfortunately, this contraction will do its work in unpleasant ways, driving down standards of living, shearing away hopes and expectations for a particular life of comfort, and introducing disorder to so many of the systems we have depended on for so long. People will starve, lose their homes, lose incomes and status, and lose the security of living in peaceful societies. It will become clear that the Long Emergency is underway.
My hope for the year, at least for my own society, is that we will transition away from being a nation of complacent, distracted, over-fed clowns, to become a purposeful and responsible people willing to put their shoulders to the wheel to get some things done. My motto for the new year: "no more crybabies!"
December 30, 2008 in Kool Aid | Permalink | Comments (3)
Another reason for a railway system along the Gulf and Deep South.
When the oil runs out, and our driving culture radically changes, how will we evacuate? By "we" I mean New Orleans and the coasts of Texas, LA and Mississippi.
If we had a railway system paid for by Obama's Infrastructure program we could all have at least a chance to get people out of harms way days in advance.
One day a car will be a luxury.
December 30, 2008 in Kool Aid | Permalink | Comments (2)
The Long Emergency
There are two realities "out there" now competing for verification among those who think about national affairs and make things happen. The dominant one (let's call it the Status Quo) is that our problems of finance and economy will self-correct and allow the project of a "consumer" economy to resume in "growth" mode. This view includes the idea that technology will rescue us from our fossil fuel predicament -- through "innovation," through the discovery of new techno rescue remedy fuels, and via "drill, baby, drill" policy. This view assumes an orderly transition through the current "rough patch" into a vibrant re-energized era of "green" Happy Motoring and resumed Blue Light Special shopping.
The minority reality (let's call it The Long Emergency) says that it is necessary to make radically new arrangements for daily life and rather soon. It says that a campaign to sustain the unsustainable will amount to a tragic squandering of our dwindling resources. It says that the "consumer" era of economics is over, that suburbia will lose its value, that the automobile will be a diminishing presence in daily life, that the major systems we've come to rely on will founder, and that the transition between where we are now and where we are going is apt to be tumultuous.
ALSO :: This post is in my new section titles "Kool Aid"
December 30, 2008 in Kool Aid | Permalink | Comments (0)